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    Home»Science & Education»November Stargazing: Supermoon number two, meteors galore, and ‘naked’ Saturn.
    Science & Education

    November Stargazing: Supermoon number two, meteors galore, and ‘naked’ Saturn.

    October 30, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read2 Views
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    November 5 Full Beaver Supermoon
    November 5 through 12 Taurids Meteor Showers Predicted to Peak
    November 17 through 19 Leonids Meteor Shower Predicted Peak
    November 23 Saturn Visible Without Rings

    A bull, a lion, a beaver and a raving lunatic walk into a bar…This month’s stargazing comes with a rich cast of characters, manifesting as two (or three?) separate meteor showers, the most super of moons, and a rare glimpse of Saturn without its most famous accessory.

    November 5: Full Beaver Supermoon

    “Full beaver supermoon” is not a combination of words that one encounters often, but this month brings the second of three consecutive supermoons. November’s moon also brings our orbital friend closest to us. That makes it  a sort of … super supermoon? 

    An actual genuine supermoon—i.e. an exact correspondence between the moon’s full illumination and it being at its closest point to the Earth—is relatively rare. The superlative term is used more generally to describe a full moon where the moon is at or near its perigee, or point where it is closest to Earth. This explains how we have three in a row at the end of 2025, and how, November’s is the most super among the trio.

    As per the Farmer’s Almanac, you can appreciate the full glory of this most super of moons on November 5 at 8:19 a.m. EST. Native American culture provides many fascinating alternative names for November’s moon: some particularly poetic monikers include the Cree nations’ “Rivers Begin to Freeze Moon,” the Haida nations’ “Bears Sleep Moon,” and the Hopi nations’ “Fledgling Hawk Moon.”

    November 5 through 12: Taurids Meteor Shower(s) Predicted Peak

    The annual celestial event referred to as the Taurids Meteor Shower is actually two separate showers–the Northern and Southern Taurids. The Northern Taurids originate from the debris shed by an asteroid, referred to as Asteroid 2004 TG10. Meanwhile, the Southern Taurids, come from the trail left by Comet 2P/Encke. The two showers are grouped together because scientists believe that both the asteroid and the comet are fragments of a single, much larger object that broke up some 20,000 years ago, leaving a collection of debris known collectively as the Encke Complex.

    The Southern Taurids are predicted to peak around November 5, but the aforementioned supermoon might  make them difficult to see, making their Northern cousins a better bet for fireball spotting. 

    The peak of the Northern shower is predicted for the night of November 9 into the early hours of November 12. The radiant point—the point from which meteors appear to originate—is just to the right of the constellation Taurus. As per NASA, the best time to look is after midnight, when Taurus is high in the sky. 

    Both Northern and Southern showers are famous for yielding bright, slow-moving fireballs, and there may be plenty of them on show. 

    November 17 through 19: Leonids Meteor Shower Predicted Peak

    The Taurids aren’t the only meteor shower to see in November. The Leonids are also in town, peaking over the course of three days in the middle of the month. The shower’s radiant point is in the constellation Leo, the lion—specifically in the lion’s neck,right between the stars Algieba and Rasalas. Leo doesn’t rise until after midnight, but once it does, the nights of November 16 and 17 should provide plenty of meteors to see. 

    You’ll have to be sharp-eyed, though.In contrast to the stately Taurids, the Leonids are speedsters, rocketing through the Earth’s atmosphere at hundreds of thousands of miles an hour. They even get a mention in the Guinness Book of World Records in the category of “Fastest Meteor Shower”.

    Thankfully, this year provides favorable viewing conditions for Leonid-spotting, as it falls a full two weeks after the full moon. The moon will be but a skerrick of a crescent, meaning that its light won’t interfere with the show. Look east, find the lion in the sky, and then wish upon a shooting star.

    November 23: Saturn Devours Its Rings

    There’s no doubt that Saturn’s defining feature is its glorious rings. Made almost entirely of water ice, the rings extend out in a startlingly flat plane perpendicular to the planet’s orbital axis. They start 4,300 miles from Saturn and extend out to a distance of 50,000 miles—but they’re barely 30 feet wide at some points, 

    But this month, the Solar System’s worst father is going bare. The Earth has spent much of the year bobbling in the vicinity of the plane of the Saturnian ring system, and on November 23 we’ll be pretty much perfectly aligned with that plane. This means that the rings will be almost invisible. If you look at the planet through a telescope, you might see them only as a thin line—or you might not see them at all, just Saturn laid bare in all his gaseous, filiphagic glory. 

    To spot it, look to the south and then crane your neck to look about 45° from the horizon. Saturn will be there, lurking between the constellations of Pisces and Aquarius.

    Whatever you’re looking for in the sky, remember that you’ll get the best experience if you get away from any sources of light pollution and let your eyes acclimatize to the darkness—and you check out our stargazing tips before you head off into the night.

    Until next month!

     

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    Tom Hawking is a writer based in New York City. He writes about culture, politics, science and everything in between. His work has appeared in the New York Times, the Guardian, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. You can subscribe to his Substack here.


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